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Nov 3, 2013
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when we educate kids, kids are not able to understand complicated things. they see the world in black and white. when you get older, you're able to see the gray. and when someone hits you -- >> i understand why kids would do it. given what you told me earlier, identifying the perpetrators within the realm of possibility? >> they're young people. >> why not paint it over? >> good question. maybe we should. you're right. >> elsewhere in the west bank, just outside of ramallah -- meet betty and mona. two members of a group of women who call themselves the speed sisters. the first all-female palestinian racing team. >> hi. i'm tony. good to meet you. >> when i'm riding a car, i'm the happiest girl ever. racing, it's in my blood. here in palestine, it's very small. there's no roads. so when i drive, i speed. i feel free. >> do you find that people underestimated you at first? >> at the beginning, they could maybe make fun of us. but when we got good scores -- >> now they know? >> yeah. a car doesn't know if you're a woman or a man. a lot of girls want to join us
when we educate kids, kids are not able to understand complicated things. they see the world in black and white. when you get older, you're able to see the gray. and when someone hits you -- >> i understand why kids would do it. given what you told me earlier, identifying the perpetrators within the realm of possibility? >> they're young people. >> why not paint it over? >> good question. maybe we should. you're right. >> elsewhere in the west bank, just outside of...
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Nov 3, 2013
11/13
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when we educate kids, kids are not able to understand complicated things. they see the world in black and white. when you get older, you're able to see the gray. and when someone hits you -- >> i understand why kids would do it. given what you told me earlier, identifying the perpetrators within the realm of possibility? >> they're young people. >> why not paint it over? >> good question. maybe we should. you're right. >> elsewhere in the west bank, just outside of ramallah -- meet betty and mona. two members of a group of women who call themselves the speed sisters. the first all-female palestinian racing team. >> hi. i'm tony. good to meet you. >> when i'm riding a car, i'm the happiest girl ever. racing, it's in my blood. here in palestine, it's very small. there's no roads. so when i drive, i speed. i feel free. >> do you find that people underestimated you at first? >> at the beginning, they could maybe make fun of us. but when we got good scores -- >> now they know? >> yeah. a car doesn't know if you're a woman or a man. a lot of girls want to join us
when we educate kids, kids are not able to understand complicated things. they see the world in black and white. when you get older, you're able to see the gray. and when someone hits you -- >> i understand why kids would do it. given what you told me earlier, identifying the perpetrators within the realm of possibility? >> they're young people. >> why not paint it over? >> good question. maybe we should. you're right. >> elsewhere in the west bank, just outside of...
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Nov 3, 2013
11/13
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. >> and educational attainment, we are tied for first with about 24 our countries. >> exactly. >> but when it comes to health and survival, the speck measure of healthy life expectancy, we're 53rd. much lower than one would think living in the u.s.? >> very counter intuitive since we talk all the time about our high life expectancy. especially for women. the lesson, we are quite obviously one of the few, the only industrial wealthy country in the world that doesn't have a national health system, and i think that is showing up in these sticks nap we like to think of ourselves as being one of the healthiest countries on earth, but, in fact, when you put it all together, people at the top may be doing well, but we're not as a country doing that well compared to other societies. >> another one of the categories that measure is economic participation and opportunity. we ranked sixth overall we we have leadership positions filled by women, but ranked 67th when it came to fwhach equality. that's a conversation that's been happening in the u.s. for a long time. >> and there was a moment in ti
. >> and educational attainment, we are tied for first with about 24 our countries. >> exactly. >> but when it comes to health and survival, the speck measure of healthy life expectancy, we're 53rd. much lower than one would think living in the u.s.? >> very counter intuitive since we talk all the time about our high life expectancy. especially for women. the lesson, we are quite obviously one of the few, the only industrial wealthy country in the world that doesn't have...
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Nov 3, 2013
11/13
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when we educate kids, kids are not able to understand complicated things. they see the world in black and white. when you get older, you're able to see the gray. and when someone hits you -- >> i understand why kids would do it. given what you told me earlier, identifying the perpetrators within the realm of possibility? >> they're young people. >> why not paint it over? >> good question. maybe we should. you're right. >> elsewhere in the west bank, just outside of ramallah -- meet betty and mona. two members of a group of women who call themselves the speed sisters. the first all-female palestinian racing team. >> hi. i'm tony. good to meet you. >> when i'm riding a car, i'm the happiest girl ever. racing, it's in my blood. here in palestine, it's very small. there's no roads. so when i drive, i speed. i feel free. >> do you find that people underestimated you at first? >> at the beginning, they could maybe make fun of us. but when we got good scores -- >> now they know? >> yeah. a car doesn't know if you're a woman or a man. a lot of girls want to join us
when we educate kids, kids are not able to understand complicated things. they see the world in black and white. when you get older, you're able to see the gray. and when someone hits you -- >> i understand why kids would do it. given what you told me earlier, identifying the perpetrators within the realm of possibility? >> they're young people. >> why not paint it over? >> good question. maybe we should. you're right. >> elsewhere in the west bank, just outside of...
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Nov 3, 2013
11/13
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ALJAZAM
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but it turned out their mother had only placed them for education and had come back for them and turned away. this turned out to be a systemic part of a scandal in india where orphanages took children to place them because of the amounts of money they received in fees from agencies. >> so how did you realize after you adopted the girls that they should is no not have been adopd out? >> well, that's a long story. but suffice it to say it was tragic and heart breaking to be back in india with their mother six or seven years after we first greeted the girls and to realize that we had unwittinglieliy used. to hold the more in my arms and have her weep and to know this cultural gap that had been created. and the girls had been here too long to being acclimate to indn society. this was an older child acomes. we reunited them when they were 18. this set us on a course to see if this happened to only us or happened to other people. i have learned as a professor that adoptions from china and nepal and many countries this has been a systemic problem because m naive americans workig with naive age
but it turned out their mother had only placed them for education and had come back for them and turned away. this turned out to be a systemic part of a scandal in india where orphanages took children to place them because of the amounts of money they received in fees from agencies. >> so how did you realize after you adopted the girls that they should is no not have been adopd out? >> well, that's a long story. but suffice it to say it was tragic and heart breaking to be back in...
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Nov 3, 2013
11/13
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ALJAZAM
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there's a push to educate the government about doing a fast screen. that's the numonic, it's fast. the f stands for face. you look for asymmetry, weakness in one side of the face. you can ask someone to smile if you believe they are having a stroke. we are looking at the mouth. if one side is different from the or, it's conservative. the a is arm. ask them to hold up their arms, if one drifts, it's concerning for weakness. the s is speech. this can be slurred speech or it can be difficulty getting your words out or difficulty understanding what one says to you. any of those would be concerning and cause to bring someone into the hospital. the t is important - which is time. time is brain. every minute 2 million neuroons die. 2 million brain cells die if they don't get the blood they need. there's nothing more important than getting to the hospital as soon as possible. >> you mentioned time is important. why is it so important to have 911 take you to the hospital instead of having someone drive you? >> i tell my patients call 911. no one likes to use an ambulance, but it is importan
there's a push to educate the government about doing a fast screen. that's the numonic, it's fast. the f stands for face. you look for asymmetry, weakness in one side of the face. you can ask someone to smile if you believe they are having a stroke. we are looking at the mouth. if one side is different from the or, it's conservative. the a is arm. ask them to hold up their arms, if one drifts, it's concerning for weakness. the s is speech. this can be slurred speech or it can be difficulty...
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Nov 3, 2013
11/13
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i got educated, i had my knocks. i own a business and i do well. host: thank you for the call. page above the fold, more on healthcare.gov. healthcare.gov, how a startup failed to launch -- and a report with extensive behind-the-scenes on how the troubled website was launched in some of the lessons dating back to 2010 when those e-mails and memos were first sent back and forth between white house staffers. let me share with you an opening paragraph or two. the president's top economic aids were getting worried -- moving to the a page -- from "thef editorials new york times," this one taking aim at the president's promises -- a frequent guest on this program has this piece from inside "the weekly standard," it is called "the debacle for liberalism." he writes -- >> this conclusion from pete winner. baxter calls. pete is joining us from starkville, mississippi. is this the land of opportunity in america? be, but it isd to increasingly getting to not be the land of opportunity. have a job where work over eight hours a day. i work overtime every week, sometimes as much as 60 hours
i got educated, i had my knocks. i own a business and i do well. host: thank you for the call. page above the fold, more on healthcare.gov. healthcare.gov, how a startup failed to launch -- and a report with extensive behind-the-scenes on how the troubled website was launched in some of the lessons dating back to 2010 when those e-mails and memos were first sent back and forth between white house staffers. let me share with you an opening paragraph or two. the president's top economic aids were...